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What do we know in our bodies? Jennifer A. Glancy uses this
fundamental question to illuminate the cultural history of early
Christianity. Studying representations in sources from Paul to
Augustine, she traces the centrality of bodies to early Christian
social dynamics and discourse.
Glancy offers in-depth analyses of important texts, historical
problems, and theological questions. How did Paul present his
suspiciously marked body as a source of knowledge and power? How
did the corporal conditioning of the Roman slaveholding system
infiltrate-and deform-articulations of Christian sexual ethics, and
create parallel systems of virtue for elite Christians and enslaved
Christians? Early Christians imagined Mary's body at the moment she
gave birth; what do these primitive images and narratives suggest
about ancient-and modern-understandings of maternal epistemology?
In an approach to cultural history informed by the writings of
philosophical and sociological theorists of corporeality, including
Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Pierre Bourdieu, and Linda Martin Alcoff,
Glancy shows that the cultural habituation of bodies caused
Christians of the first centuries to replicate hierarchical
patterns of social relations prevalent in the Roman Empire. These
embodied patterns of relations are seemingly at odds with the good
news of Christian preaching.
Corporal Knowledge sheds light on the many ways in which social
location is known in the body, and shows the significance of that
insight for a cultural history of Christian origins. By framing
questions about the function of corporal epistemology, Glancy
offers new insights into bodies, identities, and early Christian
understandings of what it means to be human."
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